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Circumventing censorship with collage

Published: 30 August 2010 Publication History

Abstract

Oppressive regimes and even democratic governments restrict Internet access. Existing anti-censorship systems often require users to connect through proxies, but these systems are relatively easy for a censor to discover and block. We explore a possible next step in the censorship arms race: rather than relying on a single system or set of proxies to circumvent censorship firewalls, we use the vast deployment of sites that host user-generated content to breach these firewalls. We have developed Collage, which allows users to exchange messages through hidden channels in sites that host user-generated content. To send a message, a user embeds it into cover traffic and posts the content on some site, where receivers retrieve this content. Collage makes it difficult for a censor to monitor or block these messages by exploiting the sheer number of sites where users can exchange messages and the variety of ways that a message can be hidden.
We have built a censorship-resistant news reader using Collage that can retrieve from behind a censorship firewall and show Collage's effectiveness with a live demonstration of its complete infrastructure.

References

[1]
S. Burnett, N. Feamster, and S. Vempala. Chipping away at censorship firewalls with user-generated content. In Proc. 19th USENIX Security Symposium, Washington, DC, Aug. 2010.
[2]
R. Dingledine, N. Mathewson, and P. Syverson. Tor: The second-generation onion router. In Proc. 13th USENIX Security Symposium, San Diego, CA, Aug. 2004.
[3]
Uproar in Australia Over Plan to Block Web Sites, Dec. 2008. http://www.nytimes.com/aponline/2008/12/26/technology/ AP-TEC-Australia-Internet-Filter.html.
[4]
OpenNet Initiative. http://www.opennet.net/.
[5]
Tor partially blocked in China, Sept. 2009. https://blog.torproject.org/blog/tor-partially-blocked-china.
[6]
The Accidental Censor: UK ISP Blocks Wayback Machine, Jan. 2009. Ars Technica. http://tinyurl.com/dk7mhl.
[7]
Wikipedia, Cleanfeed & Filtering, Dec. 2008. http://www.nartv.org/2008/12/08/wikipedia-cleanfeed-filtering.

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    Published In

    cover image ACM Conferences
    SIGCOMM '10: Proceedings of the ACM SIGCOMM 2010 conference
    August 2010
    500 pages
    ISBN:9781450302012
    DOI:10.1145/1851182
    • cover image ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review
      ACM SIGCOMM Computer Communication Review  Volume 40, Issue 4
      SIGCOMM '10
      October 2010
      481 pages
      ISSN:0146-4833
      DOI:10.1145/1851275
      Issue’s Table of Contents

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    Association for Computing Machinery

    New York, NY, United States

    Publication History

    Published: 30 August 2010

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    Author Tags

    1. availability
    2. censorship

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    • Demonstration

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    SIGCOMM '10
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    SIGCOMM '10: ACM SIGCOMM 2010 Conference
    August 30 - September 3, 2010
    New Delhi, India

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    Overall Acceptance Rate 462 of 3,389 submissions, 14%

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